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Exeter Times, 1897-9-30, Page 2LEG'. H. DIOKSON, Elvrriater, Soli - .I,• oitor of Supremo Qonrt, Notary aver xa feel , Pnblia wave anter, O auiui 0 9 Mon*fr t O : G oa u OffioeLA anson'kBfooe, Exeter, R H. COLLI1sTS, Barrister Solicitor Gonne :sneer, Etc. t MISFITS et, . ONT. OFFICE : Over O'Neil's Bank. "GI do ELLIOT, Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries ?act Couveyar tiers moo, O. 111 'hfeeey to Lean at Lowest Rates of Interest. OFFICE, - MAIN -STREET, t;:CETSFe Hemel' every Thursday, D. V. 1111+L1OT. Razeiteuie meteor. r 1541ffiT)IGAL ler VEH. R$IIT , M D C. M. Roront L nUNI r silty, Office -Crediton, Ont . n ills.ROLLINS& AMOS. Separate Offices. Residence sure as former. }}yAndrew st. omceRt Spaekmau-s building, Alain et; Dr Beeline' same as tormorly, north door: lir. Amos" Si the building, smolt door. .S.A. ROLLINS, 111. 1).„ T A• 1 see U JW.B110\V INCi AI. U,, U. C e P. S Greaueto Victoria (Love. t office and resideuee, Own nue u Ltit,o a fcrF .Elie ter . DR. UYNDMAN, coroner for bre County of Huron, OffiO*, app ewe Ceding Bros, star*, Exeter. AUCTIONEERS. �! BOSSENBERBY, General Li- ■ • coned Auctioneer Sales conducted Inaiiparte, 8atiefaatient;uarenteatt. Chortles moderate. Bengali 0. Out: - 1. ELTItY EMBER License d Ana - I tioneer or the Counties of Miran and Migt+iesex - sales condnetcd et inA- •rate Wares. Oftige. at Fest-ettroa +,rel• Iola Ont. emecumensegramenewel V.E EItIN &ItY. _. Tennent & V enneii„ ExvrrI.R. t1:1T. f erersitesoftlie Qntariu Veterina,+'f ) •l Eft, °person ; One doarSouth of i' wa Rail, 412=4,1110., AM2011111 riniE `VLTEULOO' siUTUAI.A FIRE INsunaN .:Co . .Established t n le63. HEAD OFFICE - WATERLOO, ONT this t'owpnuy has been over `Avert,'-oiait gears in successful oper+tion in Wescott Untario,alid continuo: to in�at ren sal tlst less es, damage by Fir•, llulsdin;s, tie..:,tanlise Mannfttetories and all other doacrtptioes of insurable property. lntendin insurer; nave the option of =earl neon the 1'remiuta.Totoes Cash eonern, During the_ppast ten years this company has testae (+ set Policies, covering property to tae a - amount •' 4 8,2uSB; and ul�intossesuloue t 52 l 9i1 SiE.,I,,,� .00. Assets,$L7e,1U0.00, consisting of Cask Bank Government Depotsitend the unusses- s ed Premium Notes on band and in tune J.1r.IYALnge, el.D., President: o M. 'retina 5 e retarr ; .1. 11, liter ile, Inspector , L"tIA3 B Me, Agent for Exeter and vicinitic THE FARM,, FEEDING COWS ON PASTUTRE.. A promixtentvvriter on dairy matter' and au experienced dairyman, while he sturdily insists that the feeding of a cow cannot improve her oinking qualities, and that the breeding stands first, a44 is really tile most essential point, if not the only one, in regard to the profitable charaoter of the cow. yet, as do all others who try toctstend against tote truth, gives hintsel'lf away by saying the direct contrary, hbr in writing of the rearing of a calf, says Henry Stewart, he gives some e`'1'31'- lent eep-rent advice as to feeding it, And after this lie writes, "yosi will not have a pampered, little, pretty thing that will never be of any account for tuilk- giving, but a sturdy little cow in em- bryo, slut up for business from the start eat growing more satisfactory every Jill' to the practiced eye." Now this is precisely what has been s.i:l by a great many p,rw ticed dairy - en, to the effect that the feeding of nn aminal comes before the breeding of it, a very plain and simple truth for weryone to understand, who ever fed a cow or reared a calf. This does not only relate to the young animal, but • to the cow every day of her life. Food is bike the fuel of a stove. You may have some kind of improved stove which theman whole sealing may tell you will keep you warm without any wood or coal, without feeding, in fact bolt the `test of It in practice will con- vince you that it is the fuel that makes the haat and the stove merely uses up the fuel", Of coarse there are same staves better than others, as there are Cows better than others, but it goes without a question that the fuel: makes the heat more or less, its it is Letter or. worse; and just the sante, it is the feediug that makes the milk and but- ter as it may be better or worse. This Lea very important matter to consider at. this time when the cows are on pas- ture in most eases never as goo,' as it should or *night be. The grass makes %ery good .butter, sweet and of the right co:or no doubt, but it may not maks: enough of it to pay for the use of three or four acres of hand for each. cow. and the labor of attending to the work of the dairy. There cou:d not. be s i;eater food than grans for the COW, It has in it everythi': r that the tri:k has, and in the right proportion for the best resu1ks. Du t the way cows are made is not conducive to the best re- sults inregard .o the profitablequan- tity of butter the COWS will yield otn the grans alone. Let us go Lack to the stove again for an illustration. We have a wood a ove, and we get just so much heat from the quantity of fuel theme. stove will take ina.Ad consume. a e But we are cold and must get more heat. So we go out anti gather some • THE EXET ER, TIME S tuont of aid tiie improved breeds, whe- ther intended for the dairy,or for the neo of the butoher. Mloet of us can- nat afford to buy the already im- proved entreats. We may, to be sure,. b 1 1f re a cod u f ' procure ver •uso u�l g 3 y p be • the. benefit of OUT tows, which may le mistakes„ but in not making the done at a comparatively moderate ex- g i.ense, and thus hep in this tmproFe- trent, by adding the breeding to the better feeding, and thole in time buret up a herd of caws worth twice as much as we started. with. But siittpdty 1?y at- tention to feeding. of each aures as we have, beginning now while, they are. at pasture, and noting the iut- go an, in this good way and aand after thus d to beginning. such further imlprovements as may be poesib'e, we may easily doable the pro- fits of oar herds. Others have done this before ue, and. they are reaping the profit of their enterprise in the higher nrices we are wilding to pay for some of their improved stock. Now 'et us do all we earn for ourselves in this and profit of betd ter ng our the pleas- ure o. 1 About the House. POPULAR BLUNDERS. "Success don't consist in never mek- r' il Jt~'. ^v I(. R eo; ery that euro the a Drat ccsra *of Nervous. Debility Lost Vigor and 'BANS tiling Manhood; restores the JLC weskness of body or mind caused by, osier -work, or the errors or ex. soleus of youth. Thio Remedy sib. solutely euros the most obstinate cases when all other TaEATatz:lrs have failed wren to relieve, old by drug. gists et 51 per package, or • six for ¢3, or sent by mail or -eroi t o price by edPrw,l Ti: A:KFS M. LDS(' N? ^tn. t..... is -.-:., r ::.t.t ;... :old at Browning's Drug; Store k)reter In Spring Time get Pure Blood by using B.B.B. No other remedy possesses such per- fect cleansing, healing and purifying properties as Burdock Blood Bitters. It not only cleanses internally, but it t• -•tis, when applied externally, all s ulcers, abscesses, scrofulous sores, blotches, eruptions, etc., leaving the skin clean and pure as a babe's. Taken internally it removes all morbid effete or waste matter from the system, and thoroughly regulates all the organs of the body, restoring the stomach, liver, bowels and blood to healthy action. READ -MAKER'S 0 -tr HHEVtP EMII.o r3 6ihW' •5' TISFIOTIS'i -1HE EXETER TIMES Is published every Thursday morning at Vines Steam Printing House Mau street, nearly oppot'ito Fit ton'sjewelry store, Exeter, Ont., by ` JOHN WRITE & SONS, Proprietors. RATES OF ADVERTISING: Fir€t insertion, per line 10 cents. Each subsequent insertion, per line3 cents. To insure insertion, advertisements should. e sent in not later than Wednesday morning. Our JOB PRINTING DEPA RTMENTis one t•, the largest and best equipped in the County of Huron. An work en crested to.ns will re etre our prompt attentions 05c1sioxls Regarding Newspapers. 1 -Any person who takes a paper regularly from the post office, whether directed in his name or another's; or 'whether, he has sub. se'•ibed. or not, Is responsible for payment. 2 -If a pence orders his paper dtsoontinued he mustpay ell arrears or the publisher troy i t untilpaymentis made, continue to sena it t and then collect the whole amount, whether the. paper is i aken trom the office or not. 3-1n suits for subscriptions, the suit may be instein ted in tbo;peace w here the paper ispub- al honvlt .thee !subscriber may reside pub- lished., t, hundreds of hilae away. tria have decided that refusing to k The cps take novt-spattve'-' or periodicals. from the post office, or remoOre unci leaving them uncalled tor, is prima tater evidence of intentional fraud, t v pitch pine, and flap up the stove, and in a short time it is roaring and red hot. We find then that it is not the kind of stove we have that has givens out this extra and comfortable heat, bee u the fu the he foo i t feeding of it in foo g that has increased the warmth. And this illustrates exactly this matter of adding some extra food to the grass for the pasturing cows. In the very best pasture grass there. ih only three-quarters of a pound of fat in otno hundred pounds of it. A o(nv will not eat more than fifty or sixty pounds of grass a day ; there is not room in tie estomach for more then thatso that if weneet to get a pound of fat into the cow's food, so that we may get it bat*. in the milk, we must feed some more concentrated food with the needed fat in it, just as we put the pitch pine in the stove to help out the other wood. And this is what should be done for the cows now at pasture. There are a great variety of foods offered to the dairy- men just now, most of them selling at far too high prig to afford due pro- fit to the feeder of the cows. It is true that the best is the cheapest in the end, but the best is that which af- fords t,fords the cheapest and best results. Experience has shown that there is nothing better to give to the coves to he out the grass than Dorn meal, as the basis of any desirablie mixture, or even a:erne. It is the cheapest un- questionably, for almost every dairy- man may grow it for himself, even in the more northerly parts of the conti- nent, by using some early kind, while ei.sewhere it is the standard grain crop. It has as mouth fat in it as the ordi- nary so-called oil meals, and the fat, in it is the cheapest to be procured, as weld as entirely free from objection on any account whiatever. It gives a firmness and good co:or to the butter that is very desirable in the summer, and it is amerced :withaat any ob- jection by the cows and is perfectly healthful, needing no precautions in the fee,li ng, ,pet a cow might get a few ounces too muo'h and so suffer. Eight to ten pounds of it daily will cost five or six cents if it is purchased, half as mnx-di as if it is gronvn on the farm. Four ounces of butter u ter. wi.Qa P y for it and leave ap rofit to the feeder. Rat it is the present .BI fi not h p n advantage that is only to be thought of. It has a, permanent effect on the cow, causing an improvement not only at the prese ent time, bust for a whole year after; and not only this butt it tends to im- prove the calves, which are better and worth more to the owner because of this better feeding of the cow. This is a very important part orf this matter. It is precisely what is wanted for the advance of the diary. We need to have better cows, and the only way to get them is by such a course of improve- men's as this, tending to the rearing of betterstock, and this we may besure is only to be done by a regular system of better feeding all through. It has been found by several, of tthe experi meat stations that this summer feed- ing of grtzin to cowls on even 'very good pasture, had not only a present good reedit, but the effects were plainly noticeable through the next winter, and even into the next sue raer. It .. was foutid to be a permanent im- provement of the cows, something like that permanentimprovement of the nme u.ar system of animals by train- ing adding strength to themusles nd sinews, and develeptng a stronger'and more robrar>t action of them, which is t • not tally ptpermanentwt, h those so int proved, but ibecomes an inheritable quality. ' 731ow have the horses been i reproved. in speed if not by this in- heritance of ka better ability due to training? And this applies just as distinctuty to th'e cows in the establish-• 'DEMAND FOR SAFE fl0i SES. The hue and cry that on account of the electric. car and the bicycle and homeless carriages, the noble horse was doomed to go out of use in the cities, has aboult died nlvay, and still the horse is in demand" Thi; liverymen and haet men may t have fork. the effect of the 'change in the new methods of ittdividuai traus- ptrtation in the cities; yet the horse is still in demand for the saddle and for family carriages and buggies and this demand will increase just in propor- tion to the common ogee of the electric car an dt7ie wheel: A.iready ho dnt lie wheel haveladies taken towtheosaddle toke got the exercise and the airing that the. wheeest has found so beneficial from her spin sin the country- This habit wig noon, increase until there will soon be a deivand for safe saddle horses for :ladies. The bustle and careless movement of earsandvvastreets, q for the safetheyls tfon thesethe to carr gagesre, that their horses should be accustomed to sante one twice:" Paul wrote, "I have learned." 110'61 ; ,By experience, un- doubtedly.. r}low often de • we See the good fiat sewi£e on "house -cleaning -day" undertake to add several times the usu- al amottnt of toil to the daily duties that were in themselves too heavy a burden. Result: -worst out, used up for a week, perhaps permanently weak- ened by that which could have been distributed through several days or a week with a little, injury. This is tree of evasbi-day and visitoes' day. The strange part is that she never seems to learn better. Never learns how to save effort and still attain the same results ,Ilovv very afbear do we see the parent repeat and repeat advice, instructions, orders; which, often done, are like scolding, "the more we do the more We xalust")not noticing tliat the child is thereby being trained to inc:ifference and disobeedience. So frequently are found mothers wor- ried and fretfully anxious concerning the child, not considering that imost. ohlddren: take such as an evidence of weakness, petulance and doubt in re- gard to them, on the part of the ear - elate. Such is a loom came• theta things as well as to the sudden noises which they are apt to hear in the city. The horse to be used in the city for family safety. either under the saddle or in the, carriage, must be. trained for city life. The horses there- fore, whish wi:ll be in special demand in the cities, trtit t be trained for the harp!" e. This will require selection in the breeding, and eeper"ial care in It'indling theist rom their first years until. they are prepare:1 for use, 'Cho handier of accidents which have happened in the last few years through tate frightened horse and the accornpanyi:ng runaway has become ale arming, and cavils for a remedy. This must be found its, -the proper training of the horses to be luted. The horse breeders who wish to secure good pri.es for the horses they ld seal in the home market, will do well to talcs note of the kind of horse, in demand. Buyers for this kind of a horse are a:ways plenty, and they do not hesitate to give high prices, when they can be misused that the horse they purchase has the sense a � ate e training he needs to be pe in the cities. Good saddle horses and stylish and safe carriage horses, w'i.4 ahvays bring high prices and can be as easily raised e the a car y extra little ea l t rs. The flit as she need in training, win. be well paid for when they are sold. donna della Se!gg'ilola, this with no word to hint of the change. The next morning the little . one's voice was stilled, but a noiseless peep into the room showed his eyes glued rapturouslyto t picture, whilele about 1t.is lis the hint of a smile be- trayed:'tthatphie absorbing interest was a pleased one. Since then it intervaies his morning lpicture is cibanged not too frequent- y, for a child, deanands reiteration, nn - til the bay- has become asmall con- noisseur in famous paintings, and his cccasional short visits to an art gal- lery ca gory are a great delightto him because of his mean studies. The first ten minutes of a child's (ley are a most val- uable receptive period 'llhe young brain is refreshed by sleep. unexcited by a:ny of the day's occupations, eager for impressions and peculiarly respon- sive to their influence wheal the parents usually get worsted. Some parents deem it wise to instant- ly correct, slap or punish a child upon hi's doing wrong, not stopping to con- sider, that he is a ",nettled mood" and it will do less good than at my other time. Still more do parents Itry to beat meanness out of a child that In - Denies angry wind rebellious by such pro- cess, and is, therefore, made continually worse. Yet they persist itt that which "half an eye" must observe to be"`spoil- ing the child." Their parents must have tried the same unreasonable ways with them, or they wouuld have had more sense than to keep on trying a process after they have repeatedly proved it a failure. Many people, "store up their wrath" instead of franklygoing half -way for reconciliation -until it bursts out in a x'onsunling, disgraceful flood. of abuse anti anger, Wherein they "relieve their mind" and make life-long enemies and lower themselves in the eyes of every- one. Then they do the sure way next time -and again like the washed hog re- turnang to the mire --only their mire accumulates on them instead. The most admirable trait that I ever saw in the cliarttt'teri of a near relative, when 'was, young, was his ability to receive abuse iln a kind and unruffled mood. It wars the tnust effective rebuke to the offender possible. Why shall we let poisoned arrows stick in us ? U IOB. LESLIE ReDi ' L CHANCE FOR JUSTICE. Witness -Please, y'r honor, can a man commit perjury by distorting the truth as well as by telling an untruth? Judge -Certainly. Witness -Can a pian commit perjury by insinuations intended to mislead the jury ? J ul:l ge-Ce rt'ainity . Wintess-WAe!1, judge, if you'll put that lawyer funder oath, we'll soon brave him in the penitentiary. CYCLE BURGLAR ALARMS. Burglar alarms ca.n now be attach- ed to bicycles. 'rhe device consists of a bell surrounding it clock mechan- ism which is fastened to the frame. A lever projects in line with the spokes in ' the back wheel, to sound the .titsnm when the wheel is moved. SOME VIM HARD FACTS THE SEAMY SIDE OF THE KLONDIKI GOLD REGIONS.. St,trvat ion anti l/eath Staring Many in the hate -- "What a Newspaper Correspond- ent Says eu the S,ab;t•rt.. AIX% Hl N. Stanley, who went to St. Michael's. for the Associated. Press, re- turned to Seattle on the steamer Port- land. He says: "I was seven weeks at the mouth of the Yukon at St. Michael's, where I saw all the miners coming oat and interviewed them. Ae. a rtistiRit I feel it my duty to advise everybody to stay out untill next spring. Wild, and, in many eases, ex- aggerated reports have been circulat- ed since the first discoveries were made. The strike, however, was; and is one of the grimiest if not the greatest. in the worllers history. Probably two million dollars was cleaned up this spring and next spring I Hook for from five to seven million dollars. The fields have hardly been opened up us yet, but those going to now trust bear in mind that everything in that, region was staked long before any reports reached the outer world andthat those going in now must prospect for them- selves, buy claims from the present owners,.. or work for the owners. No new strike had been reported up to the time of my leaving St. Michael's, and another may not) be made for five years. SAUCES AND CATSUPS. Chili Sauee.-Twenty-four ripe toma- toes, skinned; six onions, ten red pep- porsless it - hot -one and one-half lf very .vr Pups sugar, one and one-half pints vinegar ,and a heaping teaspoonful each of cloves, cinnamon, allspice and ground mustard, and a heaping table- spoonful of salt. Chop all fine and boil until it thiokens a little. Bottle 11 c irefuy. i 'tomato Catsup. -Heat your ripe to- matoes and press them through a sieve. To orie gallon take one quart of vinegar, four tablespoons of sugar. a little horseradish, a small red pep-. per and a little salt. Boil all together until thick enough to run out of a bot- tle. 1"pice to suit the taste with black peppt" 4 ground cloves and cinnamon afteri, It is done cooking. Bottle and seal. Winter Sauce. -1A very g ood winter rl Ayer's Cherry Pectoral costs more than other meds - cines. But then it cures more than other medicines. Most of the cheap cough medicines merely palliate; they afford local and tempo- rary relief..; Ayer's Cherry Pectoral does not patch up,or palliate. It cures. Asthma, Bronchitis, Croup, Whooping Cough, -and every other cough, will, when other remedies fail, yield to Ayer's Cherry Pectoral It has a record of 50 years of cures. Send for the "Curebook" -free. (r J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mase. STARVATION THREATENED. "I am aware therm is a populiar rut- pressioat that supplies can be bought in the vicinity of the mines. They may at present boy at six times Seattle pricers, bins they are taken at even those figures faster than they can be got in, and before winter is half over, if the priesent popull'ation stays In, there will be actual starvation. The average than requires about a ton of carefully selected food and clothing for a year's supplies. In the summer of 1896, about three thouiv,nd five hundred tons of supplies went up the river, and the new population of fifteen bemired to two thousand suffered from want. Of this three thousand five -hundred tones probably fifteen hundred tons were rum, tools, furniture, and suppl=ies other than provisions. This season, allowing the most favorable cir- cu nst:ances, not more than four thous- and two hundred tons of supplies can be got up the river, fully half of which is rum and tools, as wa11 as supplies oth- er than food. There are more than three times us many people there than last winter. FigWre it out for your- self. Food was completely ()leaned out this spring, and lasts winter there was such a scarcity that moose hams scald thirty dealers each; flour, a hundred and twenty dollars per hundred Pentads; bacon, one dollar per pound. What will not happen this coming win- ter? Why will not people actually starve to death? As to shelter, ninety percent of Dawson was living in tents in ,Tully ; labor tsscarce, and houses can- not be built. How are seven thousand people to witltatand the rigor of a aline months' winker of semi -darkness when the mercury goes down go seven- ty degrees below zero? DOUBTFUL WORE FOR WINTER. sauce for meats and to flavor some kinds of salads is made from grated eucumbers mixed -with horseradish, red peppers and nasturtium seeds. The cu- cumbers used should be large ones, picked just as they, begin to yellow or ripen. To every pint of the pulp use one red pepper chopped fine, four ounces of grated horseradish, an ounce of salt, half a teaspoonful of paprika, and a. half cupful of good cider vinegar, and the same quantity of nasturtium pods. Drain the cucumbers after they have been grated. Mix together, bot- tle and seal. Cucumber Catsup.- Use cucumbers suitable for the table; peel them, split open and scrape out the seeds, then chop very fine. To every quart of chopped cucumbers add one table- spoonful of salt. Mlix well and let them stand over night in a cov- ered stone jar. Drain them and to every quart of cucumbers add half a teaspoonful of cayenne, half a pint of strong vinegar, half a teaspoonful of blaok pepper and one tablespoon- ful of mustard. Put the mixture on the stove in re granite or porcelain lined pan; let it boil five minute& l3ottle and seal. Grape Catsup.- Ten pounds of fruit gathered just before ripening, five pounds of sugar, one quart of vinegar, two tablespoonfuls each of ground black pepper, allspice loo and cinnamon. until Boil the fruit in the vinegar reduced to' a pulp, then add he sugar and seasoning. Seal it hot. The grapes must be strained through a sieve before the other ingredients are added in order to remove the seeds. ' Green Pepper Catsup. -Five pounds of green peppers, one-half tablespoon- ful each of cloves, allspice and mace, two large onions, three heaping tea- spoonfuls of cinnamon and two quarts .of strong cider vinegar. Chop the peppers, onions and lemons fine and put them to boil in the vinegar in a granite kettlie. When suffi- ciently soft mash them . and sub through a sieve with a 'popato masher. Return to the fire and add the spices with a heaping tablespoonful of salt. Let it boil until it thickens. Do not get the hands in this mixture. Bottle and seal. SUGGESTIONS FOR MOTHER.. A mother who could hepar in tite next room, every morning ,her small son of 1 nine talking to himself as he spelled out the 'words and added the figures, cross- wise up and down, and in every pos- sible way, of a large calendar . which hung directly in front of his bed, be- thought) herself of furnishing him bete ter occu'p'ation. • tit She 'took: down the calendar and >7 up in its place agood print of the Ma- amt.' "As to labor, et is true that last winter -the winter succeeding the great strike when men were scarce- wages were fifteen dollars a day, but if ,no new strike is made what is to keep wages up this winter? There are bust three hutndred and forty claims on Bonanza, Eldorado and Hunker Creeks that wird proibably be worked this winter. An average of, eight men to each is, I think, liberal. If but two thousand seven hundred men are employed, and there arel five thousand or more seeking work, what must be the result ? Wages must go down. I am told that muia grub. has gone over the divide, yet from what 1 know 1 would wager my last dollar that not to exceed five hundred tans of supplies over and above unlet the carriers ate will reach the diggings. 1 No man go- ing in can arrive with more than a four months' supple-. "I am also told, that there is plenty at St. Michael's. So there might be, but after Sept. 15 it migi,.: as well be ' I YorkGit for to tryto trans- i Now .y', Or d over two train tie port it by 'log rabso- lutely mines of ioy river s liuhely impossible. There is not, nor will there :ever be, a clog train that can take enough to feed itself over twelve hundred utiles. Relief is, therefore, impossible. I I now w r ul I unu 1 1 1 It 1111111111.1 I I Iill III 141111 111 IIII III 111111 t I u I. gramm n,nL141.1 R J,.� �m�yS nup V ,l Luninl�,auuun u,u �ugnon�nuq AVege table Pr eparationforAs- sinilating ttlaFoodandReguta- tingt"he Stomas and.Bowels of SEE THAT THE FAC—SIMILE" SIGNATURE OF— Promotes'Ditestion,Cheerful- ness andRest.Contains neither Nnlrn orphine nut Mineral. OT NATICOTIC. Aegis afalii/IrDiVIZZATCMI Plasia Sea - 4IlicJnra • Rochelle S.ia-+ d'ris S,qd • Agircnvint (ivrdwrrA d•do gowi Seed • esa&jilWar- ligyrr } Aperfect Remedy for Coilstipa- t'ioh, Sour Storit<ach,Diarrhoea, Worfns,Convulslons,Teverish- nos and,Loss OE SLEEP Tac Simile Signature of NEW YORK. EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER, &Au IS ON THE WRAPPER _ P. �R OF Eylila BOTTLE Or Oastorie is pat np in one-sfao bottles only. It 12 not sold in bulk. Don't allow anyone to sell yon anything else on tho plea or promise that it is "just as good" and "will answer every par. Dose:' -Seo that yon got 0-A-S-T-O-R.I-A. The fac- simile deaths of !s oa osier wrapper. HUNGER AS A MOTIVE. 11 Is One al the IUalnsprlu s of Progress In. 11ninan AOhirs. The rowe'.fa of na'ture's most pow- erful, spur, hunger, are continually reddening the flunks of the primitive community, says Monist. The apost- le's seething arraignment of the Cre- tans, "whose god is their belay," would literally apply to every savage tribe and aarany a civilized one. ilunger is one of the tnainspringg of progress. At its imperative command the flint was chipped into the arrowhead, the dart, the spear. In its honor the net. was woven,and d the soil as made n the.hoe Was broken. To appease its crevin s the wild bull. is brokein to the yoke, the forests are felled, the ditoh is ctug through the marsh. t, On its errands thea ship is launched a k un on the perilous deep and the bandsent outupon the warpath. lath. Into its ser- vice have been impressed the winds of heaven, tthe etrelixn wreaths of the eaidron- and the glittering shafts of the lightning. OR is the real Alad- din's lamp of civilization. The cease - bass westward flow of the human stream. and the march of the "star of empire' have been at the behest of its genii. Whether it be born of a cruelt sky, or of the pressure of overpopula- tion, it was p:liyeda leading part in' moultding the destinies of the nations. In the fait of every world empire, from Assyria. to Rome, the conquer- ing onquering race has invariably come from the mountainous or barren rand, or from a, sterner sky. And stili to -day the nations of the beakes^'t belt of the temperate zone, where the struggle with soil and eh - mate is severest, th'e Scotch, the Eng- lish, nglith, the Dutch and the North Ger- are overruinning the whole of roams, the inhabitable globe, and bid fair to far outdo Alexander by more peaceable and far more stab:te means. KLONDYTC 1 QUOTATIONS. The cast of laving at Dawson City, the metropolis of the Slondyke gold region, may be estimated from these process: Rent of Dag cabins, 16x18 feet, per month, $40 to $75. Coast of bwiltiing a cabin, $1,000. Average board at restraurant, per day, $6. Flour, per pound, $1 °20, Bacon, per pound. $1. " TRAILS CLOSED TO SUPPLIES. "To draw provisions for the trip from Dyea to Dawson any time before the spring breaks utp is an impossibility. Relief for those ca'u+glet in the Klon- dike after winter sets in is equally im- p,assibhe, so in thel name of humanity .1 ask that a stop be put to this whole- sale transportation of people without supplies . Let nog man be allowed to enter that region unless he carries with him enough food and clothing to last him a year. There are women and little children' in there to -day who should. be sent ou tl as far as St. Mtoh- eel's before navigation closes. 'f. hear much ' of the boatitt that are building to go ugly thle river, but, aside from one steamer ready on. Aug. 11, no new boat carrying craft this the h rani be. added to th y g fall. The Klondike is a land of ice and snow as wetil as a land of gold. Let g of Sandaunt hunger, it not be made aB' , wretchedness, and death. Let no one be tatlownd to wrest from the foolish people a few hundred Nhousand saved, borrowed or begged dollars. There will.be as goon cnoes for mining in the future as now. Let the people wait. Ti caught they 'cannot walk C�.>c'ITGJ�txA. 'm:fee- :^tile atnlvb' .a�2� !cc"ti ""'"".1.71.‘71 �/j‘��C_ ever; I.• 141/. vrrar; t , t t ld . �., tom.,►��;, dre, THE DIETZ DRIVING LAMP Is about as near perfection as 50 years of Lamp -Making can attain to. It burns kerosene and gives a powerful clearwhite light, and will neither blow nor jar out. When out driving with it the darkness easily keeps about two hundred feet ahead of your smartest horse. When you, want the very best Driving Lamp to be had, ask your dealer for the "Dietz." We issue a special Catalogue of this n Lamp and. 11 you ever prowl around after night -fell. it wiinterest you, 'Tis mailed free CARTEKS TYLE IVER PILLS. R. ]E;. AIETZ CO., 60 IfaightSt, New Pork. Special terms to Canadian customers. .CWE Mord N.1iSD D.1.'Y ? o'cl fer sl ment and wcel We 1 suiting ties. I .,‘,1 { better .vise will rL.1118, The .idea of 1 -Ht omits p 'Test); . 415 ctp Early b g; N -"ith d, '35" cent hose v less ho; pair. 5•-13 all woo. pair --v 0--.M 2 pairs .t1 i`I. Jars( writes vere pt side, at carne least t' was al xtq of 1 .-ew • bot 1Clna Y Gen t ,acorea Satisi a'. .styles i It is Milver Tided. tt 000 lip 3 UR Sick Headache and relieve all the troubles fnei. dent to a bilious state of the system, such as Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness Distress after eating Pain in the Side, &c. While their most remarkable success, has been elite !noticing sIc Headache, yet CARTER'S LITTLta LIVES Picts are equally valuable in Constipation, curing and preventing this annoying complaint, while they also correct all disorders of the stomach, stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels. Even if they only cured A Ache they would be almost priceless to these who suffer from this distressing complaint; but fortunately their goodness does not end here, and those who once try them will find these little pills valuable in so many ways that they will not be willing to do without thein. But after all sick head ACHE foals bane of so many lives that here fa where we make our great boast. Our pills euro is - while others do not. CARTER'S LITTLE Lrvta PILLS are very small and very easy to tako. One or two pilis make a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action pPlease all who use them. In vials at 23 cents Sve for $i. note everywhere, or sentby melt, (=SE MEMOIRS CO., New York. Mall PSI, Small D 1 Small pv-s \Ip 14 SEALED CADDIeS '?WIDER.THE SUPERVISION OF e„„„ tb4 PLP "MONSOON" TEA.... Is packed under the supervision of the Tea -grows and is advertised and sold by them as a sample it the best qualities of Indian and Ceylon Teas. l'7 that reason they see that none but the very leaves go into Monsoon packages. .. That is why "Monsoon," the perfect Tea, r tea.nfer inferior be sold at the same price as t o Ib.a caddies of 16. 1 It is put u in sealed � 5 Ibs., and soldanthree flavours at 40c,, 60c. and STEEL, HAYTER & CO., Front St., Toron Maud Our ,t ,made lade, al or pot, with Bearin absoln away, Fift' vjeinit given .erecte( '.:expert tht en . Steel'. .and the };' •deuce ti approctl that a c with al .our 12-f1 box, or mile wi double our Ma' ienco.pl to give add itim per, or 1 by usin be punt THE GI "mai 1 CURE BILIOUSNESS CONSTIPR „veilT'��"n HEWER �. SICK C � � 060 ALL. LI i',.tli I P A KINDERGARTEN' STIR ll_ y Teacher -Now, children we will le,,Vo our verses. First small child,. regmpating verse -lie that hath eats to hear, let ,hire hear: • Very goad. Now the next little boy. Small boy, taking his one --lie that hath a noth to slunelI let pilin stamen. Great confusion among the kinders, l en i e , r � ging �p PI . reed, )ane 1 for cil prices `1C(.� S x ,addre. s Pr ,Fob,